McCaffey C. Co., Inc. v. Bank of America

294 P. 45, 109 Cal. App. 415, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 438
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 10, 1930
DocketDocket No. 7232.
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 294 P. 45 (McCaffey C. Co., Inc. v. Bank of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaffey C. Co., Inc. v. Bank of America, 294 P. 45, 109 Cal. App. 415, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 438 (Cal. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J., pro tem.

This action, begun in Los Angeles County and afterward transferred for trial to Ventura County, sounds in conversion. A jury was impaneled for the trial of the case, but, the court having granted a motion for a nonsuit, the plaintiff appealed from the judgment thereupon entered in favor of all the defendants.

According to the record, the motion purports to have been made only on behalf of the defendants Bank of America and Lawrence Warehouse Company. Upon the appeal, however, the parties have dealt with the case as if the other defendants had joined in the motion, and, accordingly, we do likewise.

Our previous decision of the appeal was vacated and a re-argument had in order to give consideration to certain matters which were not discussed in the original briefs; *419 but were first pressed upon the attention of the court in the petitions for rehearing. In fact, one of the legal points now stressed by plaintiff was not raised at all until presented in a supplemental brief filed by plaintiff after the re-argument. To that brief and the new point there urged the defendants have made no reply.

This action is a sequel to an action brought by the' same plaintiff in Los Angeles County against William F. Gasman, in which judgment for $10,240 went in favor of plaintiff on May 2, 1924. In that action plaintiff had caused a writ of attachment to issue on August 20, 1923, to the sheriff of Ventura County. The writ was accompanied by instructions to the sheriff to attach all canned goods, cans, cases, and other materials of the debtor in the canning plant located at Camarillo, in Ventura County, operated under the name of Ventura County Canning Company, which was a co-partnership composed of Gasman and two others, William Heck and W. A. Clarke. According to the return of the sheriff, he levied upon 12,000 cases of canned apricots and all other personal property of said Gasman by taking such property into his custody and placing a keeper in charge. Of the 12,000 cases of apricots, 4000 are described in the return as No. 10 cans and 8,000 as No. 2% cans. Thereupon, the Bank of America, through its vice-president, made a third-party claim to 7,773 cases of No. 2y2 cans and 3,958 cases of No. 10 cans, or a total of 11,731 cases, which were then in the custody of the sheriff under the writ, and valued in the claim at $40,000.

In its claim the bank averred that it had made certain loans to the Ventura County Canning Company on the security of the property described, and that such property was held by the bank in pledge by virtue of warehouse receipts issued by the Lawrence Warehouse Company in favor of the bank, and delivered into the bank’s possession before the attachment. The Lawrence Warehouse Company is a corporation with its office and principal place, of business in Los Angeles; and the contention of the defendants is that this company was warehousing the canned apricots in the premises in which the canning operations were being conducted by the Ventura County Canning Company.

Upon receipt of the bank’s claim the sheriff duly notified the plaintiff. After some hesitation the plaintiff refused to *420 furnish an indemnity bond to the sheriff, upon the ground that the claim was legally insufficient and that there had not been the change of possession required by law for consummation of a pledge. Left without the protection of an indemnity bond, the sheriff withdrew his keeper, thus releasing from his custody not only the 11,731 cases claimed by the bank but also whatever else had been seized under the writ. The apricots included in the claim of the bank and so released from attachment were ultimately delivered by the warehouse company to the bank and sold by the bank for its own account, the entire proceeds being applied toward satisfaction of its loans.

The judgment obtained later by plaintiff against Gasman remaining wholly unsatisfied, plaintiff began this action on December 8, 1924, against the bank, the warehouse company, the sheriff, and the surety on the sheriff’s official bond, to recover damages for conversion.

So far as the sheriff and his surety are concerned, the chief point presented by plaintiff relates to the sufficiency of the third-party claim. It was made on behalf of the bank by the vice-president in the form of an affidavit, to which the affiant took oath before a notary public. Plaintiff contends that an oath so taken by a claimant, without addition of the phraseology used in verifying a pleading, is not a “claim verified by his oath” within the meaning of section 689. of the Code of Civil Procedure. Such a claim, however, is not a pleading, and may frequently have to be drawn by persons unfamiliar with legal jargon. The affidavit criticised conforms to the usual practice, and in such matters technical niceties should not overshadow the rights of a claimant to legal possession. One of the definitions of the word “verify” in the Standard Dictionary is “to affirm under oath”, and in The New English Dictionary one of the meanings given is “to testify or affirm formally or upon oath”. In our opinion an affidavit setting out the .facts and sworn to before an authorized officer meets fully the demands of the law, and puts the attaching creditor to his election either to protect the sheriff with a sufficient indemnity bond or to submit to release by the sheriff of the property claimed.

The plaintiff argues that the sheriff’s liability is governed by the decision in Arena v. Bank of Italy, 194 Cal. 195 [228 *421 Pac. 441], In that case, however, there was first filed a claim clearly insufficient on its face, and hence, under the law as it read at the time, the claim furnished no basis for the demand for indemnity made by the sheriff. An amended claim was then filed, and, upon the strength of the amended claim, the sheriff, without any further demand, released the attached property. Such release, without notice to the attaching creditor or. renewal of the demand for indemnification, was held to be contrary to law. The case has no similarity to the case before us.

In this instance the contents of the claim were sufficient to state an apparent right in the bank, as a pledgee, to possession of 11,731 cases, and the sheriff was not required to assume a judicial pose and determine, at his peril, whether or not the circumstances connected with the issuance of the warehouse receipts and their delivery to the bank satisfied the provisions of section 3440 of the Civil Code. Where a litigant’s courage oozes under the pressure of a demand for indemnification against a third-party claim sufficient on its face, the law will not make the sheriff the scapegoat. (Taylor v. Bernheim, 58 Cal. App. 404, 408 [209 Pac. 55].)

So far, then, as concerns the 11,731 cases claimed by the bank, the sheriff is not chargeable with conversion. But his return shows seizure and custody of a total of 12,000 cases of apricots and all other personal property of the debtor found in the premises. Under section 4159 of the Political Code the sheriff’s return is prima facie

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Bluebook (online)
294 P. 45, 109 Cal. App. 415, 1930 Cal. App. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaffey-c-co-inc-v-bank-of-america-calctapp-1930.